The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 June 1924 — Page 8

Classified Ads

Classified advertising is accepted at the rate of 5 cents a line for each insertion. A booking and collection fee of 10 cents will be added for a eahrged account; no account will be charged for less than 25 cents for a single item.

RECORDS The latest Foxtrots on records. Beckman’s. 7-tl FOR SALE-Two lots on Ogden Island. W. A. Jones. Phone 254. 8-4tpd. CONGOLEUM Door mats size 18x36, price 35c, size 24x36, price 40c. Beckmans 7-tl. WANTED Family or bundle washings. Work guaranteed. Mrs. Ruth Double, Boston Street 6-4. FOR SALE OR LEASE Five acres alfalfa, nearly ready to cut. Will sell crop for season or lease on shares. S. L. Ketring. 8-ts. FOR SALE -Deering binder. 7 foot cutter. In good shape. W. C. Redmon or call 380. 8-1 p. STOP—At the White Sign on south Huntington street for home baked goods. For special orders call 4710, Louise Bunger. 8-4 p. RUGS A new lino of Axmin - Ur Velvets, Tapestry and Wilton Rugs in all sizes arrived Tuesday at Beckman s Store. 7-t t FOR RENT Major Marshcottage home and its beautiful grounds in South Park, for t ie season. DRY CLEANING Let us clean ; and press* your clothing. We call and deliver in and near Syracuse. Phone Bachman s store. Shrocks, Warsaw. 8-lp<k CONGOLEUM RUGS—Arrived on Tuesday. A complete line of Congoleum Rugs in all t Beckman’s Store. Btf FOR RENT Cottages on the lake by the month or season. See Geo. L. Xanders. 8-4’ RUGS A fine variety >f- /V minster rugs. 9x12. The price is now $35.00. Come in and look them over. Beckman s 7-’f j|umm44- .. •’ . M..I-L ■ - —•**** *■■■ r.■ - ~ GUARANTEED — Hemstitching and Picoting attachment. Fits anv sewing machine. $2.50 nrepaid or C. O. D. Circulars free. LaFlesh Hemstitching Co., Dept. 2. Sedalia. Mo. 8-ltp. K ITCH EN CA Bl NETS-With porcelain tops at $29.00 at Bec> - man’s Store. ,7-ts OFFICE SUPPLIES TypeW’iter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. FURNITURE- Fi n e Walnut bed room suites, from $125 tin are now on display at Beckman’s Furniture. Store. 7-ts ~ LAKEPROPERTY—If you have any lake property for sa’e or rent, list it with F. E. Kale Island, Lake Wawasee. Syracuse. Ind. Phone 561. 47-ts WANTED—Men or women to take orders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for men, women, and children. Eliminate darning. Salary s7sa week full time, $1.50 •an hour spare time. Beautiful Spring line. International Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 7-10 p. W A N T E D—Students to take piano lessons. Call 905. Louise Snobarger. 1-ts. WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. «£• Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts FOR SALE—Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone 316, or address Dan Mishler. Syracuse. 3(>tf

FOR SALE Glazed Window Sash Cement Blocks Boats and a Canoe Small Cottage HALLIE HOLLOWAY GEO. L XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse. Ind. Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRACK LINE J. E. Rippey e 101 Syracuse, Ind. •If 1 don’t haul your freight we both lose.” ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. v Telephone 75

* ____________ UNITED STATES TIKES AKE GOOD TIKES ■■l i * 1 """" usco FABRIC TIRES 30x3 and 30x3% inch t FOR many years the USCO f I Fabric has been the stand- ggRSg < ard of value in a fabric tire. ggSZ u It’s a better tire today for I the light-car owner than a I BB I cheap cord of unknown make. CggM 1 /B / Costs less and gives more. / B II The USCO Fabric will give /J you a lot of tire service for the money. eßuy U. S. Tires from SYRACUSE AUTO SALES Syracuse, Indiana

WET WEATHER VIDS PLANT DISEASES

There are two things at least that the rainy weather of t*e last few weeks is good for. ducks and plant diseases. Leaf sp s and blights of all s ting a wonderful start. Tomatoes, strawberries, beets, raspberries and vegetables and fruits of all kinds are quite liable suffer this year. Look at the strawberry leaves or beet leaves and see tne small purple spots appearing. These are the beginning of a disease that nrav cau ;? considerable trouble. What is true of these diseases is true of manv others like apple scab, apple blotch, cherry leaf blight and raspberry anthracnose, sav betanists of the agricultural Experiment Station, Purdue University. Bordeaux mixture is the control for all these diseases but the snray must be ar>nlied now while the plants are still voung. Some peonle are afraid that ra : ns wi’l wash off the sn r av, but once bo~deeux dries it is almost impossible to get rid of it. Snra •- "na*ed plants will not become diseased during this wet weat’ - er. Bordeaux contains a di sea unison, blue vitiic’ mixed wit** ’»me and a thornnah coating of ♦ his snrav will kill any disease spores that are blown or spattered to the plant. Anv commercial borde®nx and a small hand spraver will be sat- " There is bnt mp nr - cantion in snraving. that i« to cover 1 oth the ton and the bot-

_ ~ .. ._ . _ The Touring Car / A V &0 B. Detroit _/dl A Demountable Rim* ijfl * * , *** V ,r * Helps millions enjoy their vacations Ford cars will carry millions on healthful, pleasant vacations this summer — vacations that are inexpensive because of die low cost of maintenance of this reliable car. Everyone wants a car for the outdoor months. That means, of course, an unusually heavy demand for Fords. To avoid delays imd disappointment list your order now. A sf"* Detroit. XUciuoa SEE THE WEAKEST AVTHOKXZED FORD DEALER THI UNIVIBSAL CAR .

tom of the leaves because the disease spores can attack the bottom of the leaf as easily as the top. It will certainly pay this year to spray tomatoes, beets, celery, cucumbers, strawberries, raspberries, apples and other fruit-. TH A NS.CONTI NEXT A L TRIP With Ford Cor No. 10.000,000 now in service and making a trans-continental trip from New York to over the Lincoln highway, the map who enjoys figuring can have a world of practice. The other day one gifted gentleman worked out the tire problem. He figured that the 40 million tires used on the 10 million Fords, if stacked un world make a rubber column, 2,000 miles high. Then, looking for road trouble, he punctured each of the tires, and then fi®vred that one man working eight hours a day except Sundays and holidays a n d rpnairine a tire everv five minutes would finally finish the job in 400 years.

FOR OVER 40 YEARS HALL‘9 CATARRH MFDICINS has been used successfully in the treatment O H C ALL’S CATAFnH MEDICINE conlists of an Ointment which Quickly R'lLwes bv local application, and th® internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces, thus reducing the inflammation. Sold by all druggists F. J. Cheney * Co., Toledo. Ohio.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

The Overland icsa Quality ( luscd Cur at only $l6O more than the touring car— . The World”*! Ixiwest Priced Closed Car with doors front and rexr. SYRACUSE AUTO SALES

OVER $109,000 IN PREMIUMS The large sum of $106,000 is being offered by the Indiana Board of Agriculture at the State Fair, at Indianapolis, September 1 to 6, for the purpose of attracting exhibits from all parts of the state that this great institution of learning may represent the very best that is produced here or elsewhere. This is for the benefit of the taxpayers of Indiana, who furnish the backing for the State Fair and many of whom will probably attend this year for the first time. o EVOLVE INSURANCE PLAN The new Employees’ Death Benefit plan under which employees of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) are given life insurance in sums ranging from $500.00 to $2000.00, depending on the length of time the individual has been in the service nf the Company, has been evolved.

TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES

You May Break Your I Glasses

.Unless completely shattered, save the pieces, bring them to us und in a short time we wiU exactly duplicate the broken lens without re-ex-amination of your eyes. Our repair work reflects most creditably the conscientious service we render. Make Thia Your Optical Headquarter*. NEVIN E. BRETZ -Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen

HOUSEHOLD HINTS

Hot vinegar will remove paint splashes from windows. To keep silver untarnished when not in use for a long time, pack it in dry liter. Charcoal powder is effective for cleaning knife blades which have become stained. Celery, carrots, radishes, and beets keep fresh for weeks if buried in moist sand. Add a few drops of lemon juice to eggs while being scrambled. It will improve the flavor. Dip new brooms into boiling water. Shake well and dry. Hang them up and you can use the old ones for the porch and sidewalk. Before using a new iron kettle grease inside and outside and let stand forty-eight hours; then wash in hot water in which a Targe lump of cooking soda ha< been disolved. Mirrors should be cleaned with ammonia water. Do not let the direct rays of the sun fall on the glass if it can be avoided, as the sunlight affects the metallic coat ing oh the back of the mirror. Equal parts of ammonia anc turpentine krill take paint out el clothing, no matter how dry and hard it may be. Saturate the spots two or three times and wash afterward in soapsuds. Varnished wall paper will stand washing, therefore, do not omit to have every room prepar ed i nth is way washed once a yeai at least. It will improve the appearance of the paper and make the room sweeter. Don’t dry dishes. After washing place carefully in a dish drainer, pour boiling water ovei them and let stand until thoroughly dried. When putting them away you may polish them, but this is not always necessafy. If paper is used on your pantrj shelves, put on three thicknesses at once. It is as easy to cui three layers as one. They can be removed then, one at a time, as they become soiled, a few dishes being removed and replaced as the paper is rolled away. To remove white spots from furniture dip a cloth in hot water nearly to the boiling point. Place over spot, remove quickly, and rub over spot with dry cloth Repeat if spot is not removed Alcohol or camphor quickly ap plied may be used, rubbing lightly- ” Butter will stay sweet for any length of time if tied in a clear, cloth snd put in a brine made ir the following wav: Boil sufficient rock salt that when dissolved ir water wilt float an egg. Skim and when cold nour over butter Be sure the brine covers all the butter and that the crock is tightly covered.

Twelve million children and young people of rural America have not even a country Sunday school to help them understand the problems of life. As many more receive no reUgious teaching worthy of the name. The task of reaching these neglected children and young people ought to be regarded as the most important work of every American. It can’t be done by compelling them to work in the mines, mills and factories.

F" w\ I I ? Zz'A UPW V9OUUMOLMMA UJUL |

PAUL DRESSER MEMORIAL Indianapolis, Ind., June 13.— Interest in the project to erect a fitting memorial to the memory of Paul Dresser, author* of “On the Banks of the Wabash,’’ the official state song of Indiana, is becoming nation-wide according to William Fortune, chairman of the executive committee in charge of the Dresser memorial campaign. The memorial is to be located on the west bank of the Wabash where the stream is crossed by the National Highway as it enters Terre Haute from the western boundary <f the state. That Indiana people all over the United States are to have a share in the “fund that is being raised to honor Dresser’s m°mr>rv was indicated today when Will H. Hays, a native Hoosier who is head of the motion picture industry in America, forwarded to the Dresser Memorial Committee headquarters here the names of the national executive committee that is to conduct & nation-wide campaign for the Dresser memorial fund. Mr. Hays is chairman of the national committee, with Ray Long, editor of the Cosmopolitan magazine, as vice chairman, and Robert D. Heinl, of Washington, D. C., as. secretary. The members of Mr. Hays’ national committee, all of them men of national prominence, arc: George Ade, Scott C. Bone^ : governor of Alaska; Gene Buck, pres- [ ident of the American Society of Authors, Composers and Publishers; Howard Chandler Christy, . Irving Cobb, Kent Cooper, Max ‘ Ehrmann, Joseph T. Fanning, Montague Glass, Orville Harrold, ‘ Roy W. Howard, Peter B. Kyne, A. W. Macy, Harry S. New, Merej dith Nicholson, Daniel G. Reed, formerly of Richmond, Ind.; John ’ C. Shaffer, the newspaper pubj lisher, and Booth Tarkington. ‘ Simultaneously with the openj >ng of the Dresser memorial campaign in Indiana, the national executive committee will begin, , next Monday, to offer Indiana oeople all over America the opportunity to have a 4hare in the date’s tribute to the author if its official song. The campaign : n Indiana and over the rest of < the United States will be coni ducted during the period from i June 15 to June 30, which was ?et aside as State Song Fortnight I ’n a proclamation issued last nonth by Governor Emmett F. Branch. FORD°SALES May was another 200,000 sales month for the Ford Motor Company, making that month one of | the highest in the company’s History and completing three consecutive months in which domestic retail deliveries exceeded the 100,000 figure. The company announced that 209.601 Ford cars and trucks were sold at retail in the United States during May, an increase >f 38.000 over the same month a .•ear ago. The demand for Fordson tractors both for industrial and agricultural purposes continues strong and retail sales for May average more than 300 a day. o Many Women Use Glycerine Mixture Women appreciate the quick action >f simple glycerine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adlerika. Most medicines act only on lower bowel but Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, and removes all gasses and qfiisons. Excellent for obstinate conUipation and to guard against appeniicitis. Helps any case gas on stomach in TEN minutes. Thornburg’s Drug Store. (3)

A good night’s rest There’s nothing like it to put you in shape for the day’s duties or pleasures. There’s nothing like Dr. Mlles* Nervine to Bring refreshing, restful slumber. Buy a bottle. If if does not help you. Your druggist sdb ft at pre-war prices—sl.oo per bottle.

Hudsons Values

VOILE BLOOMERS at 75e pair Ladies summer bloomers made of sheer fine quality shadow striped voile. Cut full sixe and well made. Step-ins at same price. 32 INCH TISSUES at 39c yd. A dandy fabric for ladies* or children’s hot weather dresses. You can have this fabric in plain or fancy colors. 32 inches wide. APRON FROCKS at 93c each Ready made garments at a price that is less than the material alone would cost you. Pretty colors and smart styles. 40 INCH VOILES at 39c yd. A most desirable material for summer dresses. In dark and light colors, and in exceptionally pretty patterns. 40 inches wide. NEW SWEATERS at $2.50 up Clever styles of sport sweaters for summer wear. Bright sport colors and also many staple colorMade of soft wool. DRESS LINENS at 89c y<L A splendid quality of 36 inch dress linen. In colorings that arc desirable for summer wear. This is a low price for this fabric. BATHING SUITS at $3.95 up Bradley ail wool bathing suits for ladies and misses. In the newest color combinations. Bradley, suits are the best for flt and wear. SWISS APPLIQUE at 55c yd. In single dots or flock dots. A very popular fabric for summer frocks. In dark etdors and bright sport shades. SUMMER COATS at SIO.OO Unusual values are being offered in our coat department. Ts you want a light weight garment is the time to get it. DRESS GINGHAMS at 25c and 30c 32 inches wide and in a tremendous variety of patterns and colorings. Our ginghams are all well known standard brands. BATHING SUITS at $1.50 up Bradley swimming for girls and tiny tots. The same standard of quality that you find in the IStlies suits. A pretty assortment. SPORT RATINES at 50c yd. Clever color combinations for summer sport frocks. Priced so reasonable that you can have several dresses at small cost. RAYON VESTS at SI.OO Rayon is the new name for artificial silk. The garments have all the appearance of a real silk vest. In orchid, flesh, white and peach. DEVONSHIRE CLOTH at 42c yd. The cloth that is guaranteed not tfcJJade either from washing or the sun. Will wear like iron. A practical fabric for children’s wear. GIRLS DRESSES at SI.OO For girls, ‘ages 7-8-10-12-14. Made of pretty patterns of good quality ginghams. Dandy dresses for summer wear. WASHABLE TAFFETA at $1.75 yd. In plain colors for frocks and of delicate shades for lingerie. 36 inches wide. A silk that will give satisfactory wear. ’ BABY CAPES at s3*s v Knitted capes for Infants. In pink, blue, or white. A dandy wrap for the infant to wear in a car. Some are embroidered, w

0. A. BILLMAN Aermotor Windmills Wpter Supply Goods Well Drilling and Repairing. Phone 333 Ligonier, Ind.